Crafter Level ; Crafting Proficiency Rank ; Crafting Feat
Formula Price
Tools You have an appropriate set of tools and, in many cases, a workshop; Crafting Materials You must supply raw materials worth
Extra Requirements
Crafter Level ; Crafting Proficiency Rank ; Crafting Feat
Formula Price
Tools You have an appropriate set of tools and, in many cases, a workshop; Crafting Materials You must supply raw materials worth
Extra Requirements
This setup time is the base number of days it takes to create the item. If you decide to take the slow and methodical approach (Core Rulebook 244), you spend that number of days of Regular Setup in Table 1, and then attempt the Crafting check to determine your success. You can instead rush the process (Treasure Vault 158), taking days off the time needed to setup the item while introducing a greater risk of failure.
Below, you may change your Crafting Proficiency Rank and your Crafter Level.
Take the DC from Table 1. When you take Rush Crafting, you have to decide on your approach to the job, from Trained to Legendary, which is limited by your proficiency. That choice sets the Setup Time and the Crafting DC.
Critical Success Your attempt is successful. Each additional day spent Crafting reduces the materials needed to complete the item by an amount based on your level + 1 and your proficiency rank in Crafting.
Success Your attempt is successful. Each additional day spent Crafting reduces the materials needed to complete the item by an amount based on your level and your proficiency rank.
Failure You fail to complete the item. You can salvage the raw materials you supplied for their full value. If you want to try again, you must start over.
Critical Failure You fail to complete the item. You ruin 10% of the raw materials you supplied, but you can salvage the rest (30 gp). If you want to try again, you must start over.
If your Crafting check is a success, you expend the raw materials and can complete the item immediately by paying the remaining portion of the item’s Price in materials. Alternatively, you can spend additional downtime days working on the item. Above, you may change your Proficiency Rank and your Crafter Level. Below you can choose your Crafting Check Result from Step 3 and you may select the Additional Days of Work. This webtool calculates the Remaining Balance.
If you are at least an Expert in Crafting, you can rush the finishing process (toggle the Rush the Finish), reducing the value of the materials you must expend to complete the item. Doing so comes at a risk; at the end of the creation process, once the item is finished, you must attempt a DC flat check.
Success the item is complete and works perfectly.
Failure the item is still completed, but it gains a quirk.
Critical Failure the item is ruined or might become a cursed item attached to you.
To use one of the NPCs in this section to represent an NPC of a different ancestry, apply the adjustments below for the desired ancestry. These provide the basic features from that ancestry, like darkvision, altered Speed, and unique abilities like a halfling’s keen eyes. For other ancestries, you can create similar templates following the same format. In addition to these base changes, you can add the effects of a specific heritage: you might apply the snow goblin heritage if your NPC is a Frostfur goblin and you want them to have cold resistance. You can also give them an ancestry feat, or even adjust their ability scores and skills to reflect the new ancestry’s strengths and weaknesses. For a half-elf, half-orc, or any other heritage essential to the character, you should always apply the heritage effect.
| Ancestry | New Trait | Senses | New Languages | Speed Change | Special |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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ANADI | — | Anadi, Mwangi | — | Fangs |
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ANADI | — | Anadi, Mwangi | — | Fangs |
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ANDROID | — | Androffan | — | — |
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AUTOMATON | — | Utopian, the language of the plane of, Axis | — | — |
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AUTOMATON | — | Utopian, the language of the plane of, Axis | — | — |
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AZARKETI | — | Alghollthu | -5 feet | — |
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CATFOLK | Low-Light Vision | Amurrun | — | Land on your Feet |
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CONRASU | — | Mwangi, Rasu | — | Sunlight Healing |
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CONRASU | — | Mwangi, Rasu | — | Sunlight Healing |
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DOPPELGANGER | — | — | — | — |
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DOPPELGANGER | — | — | — | — |
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DRAGON | — | Draconic | — | — |
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DWARF | Darkvision | Dwarven | -5 feet | — |
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ELF | Low-Light Vision | Elven | +5 feet | — |
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FETCHLING | Darkvision | Shadowtongue | — | — |
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GHORAN | Low-Light Vision | Sylvan | — | — |
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GNOLL | — | Gnoll | — | Bite |
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GNOLL | — | Gnoll | — | Bite |
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GNOME SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Gnomish, Sylvan | — | — |
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GOBLIN SMALL | Darkvision | Goblin | — | — |
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GOLOMA | — | Goloma, Mwangi | +5 feet | Eyes in Back |
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GOLOMA | — | Goloma, Mwangi | +5 feet | Eyes in Back |
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GRIPPLI SMALL | — | Grippli | — | — |
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GRIPPLI SMALL | — | Grippli | — | — |
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HALFLING SMALL | Keen Eyes | Halfling | — | — |
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GOBLIN | Darkvision | Goblin | — | — |
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HUMAN | — | — | — | — |
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KASHRISHI SMALL | — | Kashrishi | — | — |
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KASHRISHI SMALL | — | Kashrishi | — | — |
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KITSUNE | — | — | — | — |
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KOBOLD SMALL | Darkvision | Draconic | — | Draconic Exemplar |
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LESHY SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Sylvan | — | Plant Nourishment |
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LIZARDFOLK | — | Iruxi | — | Aquatic Adaptation |
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NAGAJI | Low-Light Vision | Nagaji | — | — |
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NAGAJI | Low-Light Vision | Nagaji | — | — |
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ORC | Darkvision | Orcish | — | — |
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RATFOLK SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Ysoki | — | — |
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SHISK | — | Mwangi, Shisk | — | — |
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SHISK | — | Mwangi, Shisk | — | — |
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SHOONY SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Shoony | — | Blunt Snout |
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SKELETON | — | Necril | — | — |
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SKELETON | — | Necril | — | — |
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SLIME | — | — | -5 feet | — |
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SPRITE | — | Sylvan | -5 feet | — |
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STHENO | — | — | — | — |
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STHENO | — | — | — | — |
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STRIX | — | Strix | — | — |
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TENGU | Low-Light Vision | Tengu | — | Sharp Beak |
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VANARA | — | Vanaran | — | — |
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VANARA | — | Vanaran | — | — |
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VISHKANYA | — | Vishkanya | — | — |
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VISHKANYA | — | Vishkanya | — | — |
To use one of the creature adjustments in this section, just click the adjustment and the changes will be present in the card.
| - | 0 | No adjustment will be applied. | |
| Book of the Dead | Target Creature | Level | Description |
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Any creature | 0 | The ephemeral form of a ghostly creature lets it pass through solid objects and float in the air. |
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Any creature | 0 | Ghoul creatures are typically hairless and gaunt with blue or purple skin and pointed ears. |
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Any creature | 0 | Most skeletons are mindless and follow either the basic instincts they had in life or orders given by their creator. |
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Any creature | 0 | This creature is a reanimated mindless corpse. |
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Any creature | 0 | All types of creatures can have their corpses preserved and rise as mummies. |
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Any creature | 0 | A shadow creature is little more than a sentient shadow powered by negative energy. |
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Any creature | 0 | Most skeletons are mindless and follow either the basic instincts they had in life or orders given by their creator. |
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Any creature | 0 | This creature is a reanimated corpse. |
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Any creature | 0 | A vampiric creature consumes the blood of the living for sustenance. |
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Any creature | 0 | All wights can drain life through their unarmed attacks, but some can draw life force through weapons as well. |
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Any creature | 0 | A zombified creature is a mindless, rotting corpse that attacks everything it perceives. |
| Dark Archive | Target Creature | Level | Description |
|
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An existing creature | +1 | An experimental cryptid has been purposefully altered through alchemy, engineering, magic, or ritual to contain some degree of construct components. Although powerful, the process is volatile and imperfect. |
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An existing, living creature | +1 | Some strange creatures defy what’s expected from others of their kind due to a peculiar mutation. A mutation can come from a wide variety of sources: a quirk in their lineage, effects from their environment, radiation from bizarre crystals, or exposure to uncontrolled magic. |
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An existing, living creature | +1 | Scholars dream of discovering primeval creatures: remnants of an older age, long thought extinct. Primeval cryptids are resilient survivors of their kind or particularly clever individuals. |
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An existing creature | +1 | As stories spread about a rumored cryptid, the weight of collective belief transforms the creature to match the tales. The limits of its physical body no longer confine it. |
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An existing creature | +1 | A secret society member is an NPC or creature that belongs to a covert organization with influence and connections throughout its local setting and perhaps beyond. |
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The DiceRoller allows you to roll dices from Creatures description and typing an easy formula.
Each creature has some skills or saves with a bonus or penalty to roll. If you click on those modifiers the Diceroller will give you the roll as a popup! Furthermore, you can also click on all the attacks and damages dice descriptors and you'll have the roll has a popup.
These rolls are logged in the diceroller window and you can check them after and repeat them clicking on the pencil at the end of each roll row.
If you want to type the roll, I give you some examples:
1d20+52d20kh Keeps Higher result (fortune)2d20kl Keeps Lower result (misfortune)2d8 bludgeoning + 1d6 fire
When the group overcomes an encounter with a hazard or creature, each character gains XP equal to the XP of the hazard or creature in the encounter. Match the Party level in the following table to know the XP awarded:
See Experience Points.
Here there is a list of the various monster parts you can gather from this creature. After defeating the monster, players can determine how to best use the parts to refine and imbue items.
You can find rules for refining and imbuing items from a monster at Battlezoo Bestiary.
I update a lot of data from all the Rulebooks and adventure books. I'm developing new features each week. You can collaborate and make suggestions in our Discord Server where we plan and iron out all the webtools. You can access to the Discord Server once you become a Patron. My work updating all data and adding new features to this webtool is only possible to the generous actions of this people:
Visit my patreon webpage and be aware of all the stuff I'm working on.
Help keep running this webtool and become a patron!
Welcome to the Pathfinder Bestiary! Inside this tome of creatures, you’ll find haughty celestials and ravenous fiends, fierce animals and strange moving plants, new peoples to interact with and horrid monsters to hunt down. And while this book details hundreds of creatures, it’s only a portion of the myriad interesting creatures that populate the world of Pathfinder.
To use this book, you need the Pathfinder Core Rulebook, which contains the rules of the game and gives you further understanding of each creature’s rules and its place in the world. Using both of these books allows you as the Game Master (or GM) to create stories of grand adventure and populate them with fearsome foes, possible allies, and friendly guides.
Most of the sections of this book describe a creature or a group of related creatures, present their game statistics, illustrate their place within the game world, and provide details about their behavior or society.
In this introduction, you can find advice on how to play these creatures in the game, including how to read and use their statistics, advice on roleplaying their interactions with player characters, and guidance on adjusting creature statistics to fit the needs of your setting.
Lastly, the appendix in the back of the book contains sections that provide information about frequently used monster abilities, creature traits, new rituals, uncommon languages, and lists of monsters sorted by type and level.
While the other players portray their characters, you as the Game Master get to play everyone else. This section provides the basics for using the creatures in this book. It guides you through the process of reading and understanding the creatures’ statistics so the creature can either provide a threat or serve as an ally in and out of combat. It also provides general advice for roleplaying creatures to help provide more depth to the creatures in your game’s world.
Each creature’s rules appear in a stat block, with a structure similar to those of feats, spells, and magic items. Because creatures have more abilities than those game elements, however, their statistics include more entries, many of which have special formats.
A creature’s traits line sometimes begins with a rarity; if the creature’s rarity is common, no rarity is listed. The next entry is its alignment, which is given as a one- or two-letter abbreviation (LG for lawful good, N for neutral, CE for chaotic evil, and so on); these abbreviations are listed comprehensively on page 345. Next is the creature’s size (Tiny, Small, Medium, Large, Huge, or Gargantuan). Any other traits are then listed. The traits appearing in Introductionthis book, including some traits from the Pathfinder Core Rulebook, can be found in Creature Traits on page 344.
Actions and activities the creature can use have the appropriate icons next to those abilities’ names noting how many actions they require. A creature always has the requisite proficiency ranks or other abilities required to use what’s listed in its stat block. For instance, a spellcasting creature can perform the Cast a Spell activity, and a creature is never untrained with any of its items.
Some abilities are abbreviated in stat blocks and described in full in the Ability Glossary on pages 342–344.
Perception The creature’s Perception modifier is listed here, followed by any special senses.
Languages The languages for a typical creature of that kind are listed here, followed by any special communication abilities. If a creature lacks this entry, it cannot communicate with or understand another creature through language.
Skills The creature is trained or better in these skills. For untrained skills, use the corresponding ability modifier.
Ability Modifiers The creature’s ability modifiers are listed here.
Items Any significant gear the creature carries is listed here.
Interaction Abilities Special abilities that affect how a creature perceives and interacts with the world are listed here.
AC, followed by any special bonuses to AC; Saving Throws A special bonus to a specific save appears in parentheses after that save’s bonus. Any special bonuses to all three saving throws against particular types of effects are listed after the three saves.
HP, followed by automatic abilities that affect the creature’s Hit Points or healing; Immunities; Weaknesses; Resistances Any immunities, weaknesses, or resistances the creature has are listed here.
Automatic Abilities The creature’s auras, any abilities that automatically affect its defenses, and the like are listed here.
Reactive Abilities Free actions or reactions that are usually triggered when it’s not the creature’s turn are listed here.
Speed, followed by any other Speeds or movement abilities.
Melee (traits; some weapon traits, such as deadly, include their calculations for convenience) The name of the weapon or unarmed attack the creature uses for a melee Strike, followed by the attack modifier and traits in parentheses. If a creature has any abilities or gear that would affect its attack modifier, such as a weapon with a +1 weapon potency rune, those calculations are already included, Damage amount and damage type, plus any additional effects (this entry is Effect if the Strike doesn’t deal damage).
Ranged As Melee, but also lists range or range increment with traits, Damage as Melee.
Spells The entry starts with the magical tradition and whether the spells are prepared or spontaneous, followed by the DC (and attack modifier if any spells require spell attack rolls). Spells are listed by level, followed by cantrips. A spell prepared multiple times lists the number of times in parentheses—for example, “(×2).” Spontaneous spells list the number of spell slots after the spell level.
Innate Spells These are listed like other spells, but can also include constant, at-will, and focus spells. If the creature has a focus spell as an innate spell, it works like other innate spells with listed uses, rather than costing Focus Points. Spells that can be used an unlimited number of times list “(at will)” after the spell’s name. Constant spells appear at the end, separated by level. Rules for constant and at-will spells appear on page 342 in the Ability Glossary.
Focus Spells If a creature has focus spells, this entry lists the spells’ level, the Focus Points in the creature’s focus pool, the DC, and those spells.
Rituals Any rituals the creature can cast appear here.
Offensive or Proactive Abilities Any actions, activities, or abilities that automatically affect the creature’s offense, as well as free actions or reactions that are usually triggered on the creature’s turn, appear here in alphabetical order.
Whether it’s an adversary or a potential ally, a creature might have a very different worldview than the PCs. When roleplaying creatures, think about how they experience the world differently due to their senses, physiology, and habitat. Each creature entry in this book gives you some context about the creature’s worldview, motivations, ecology, and societies. Many sections have sidebars that provide relevant facts about creatures (labeled with the icons listed in the Sidebar Icons section on page 7). You can use the information in each creature entry as cues on how to roleplaying the creature in and out of combat. These cues can be as simple as a difference in idioms (perhaps saying “in the other tentacle” rather than “on the other hand”) and as complex as determining motivations, hopes, and dreams for an individual creature. Understanding a creature you’re playing also informs what tactics they’ll use, as well as whether they are willing to surrender or flee when things don’t go their way.